How to write an exam---EXAM101.

Alan Robert Clark

August 25, 2004

Printable pdf version
Abstract: This document basically stems from my frustration at people doing stupid things that are very easy to avoid, but lose a lot of marks in the process. The other side of the same coin, a similar frustration occurs when I am asked ``why I lost one mark, but the answer is right''. This particular frustration can have a fairly violent expression. :-)

1  Basic Premise

Much of what I have to say on this topic stems from the following basic premise as to the purpose of an examination:
It is your job to convince me that you know what you are doing. It is NOT my job to extract some thread of quirky logic from a morass of random scribblings.1

2  Before the Exam.

3  Whilst in the venue, before the Exam begins.

4  The Writing.

Time's Up!

Final Word

Remember that it is a simple fact of life that a pleasantly laid out, neat, logically presented examination paper will gain a higher mark than the one where the information is not explicit and clear. There is a ``mythconception'' that ``we are out to get them''. Please note that the School only gets decent credit (funding) for completed students.

The online version is http://ytdp.ee.wits.ac.za/ExamWritingSkills.html


1
Given the amount of time that I can devote to reading the answer, you need to get the maximum amount across in the clearest possible manner! (100 Students, 5 questions each, at only 5 minutes per question, that translates to over a week of full-time marking, doing nothing else!!, but often takes more than 5 mins/question.)
2
I do not think that I have ever seen a paler face, and a more contemplative expression than the chap who realized that he was writing Signal Processing, not High Frequency Techniques only when I handed him the question paper. I believe his words were: ``But...''
3
Do NOT try to do a last-minute conflab with your fellow students. It does not assist!
4
I was once asked by student A whether he could ask student B for an explanation of a finer point on the sheet. E=mc2 ensued :-)
5
I once assisted in invigilating a first year economics course, with over 1200 students in Hall 29 (ONE paper). A good 10% of the class was mis-seated. There were, I think, about 30 invigilators all calling student numbers out to each other. The JSE had nothing on it.
6
Rumour has it that a senior academic opposed them in the Senate, since it would no longer allow him to mark affirmatively :-)
7
Not too difficult for us engineers, but I was in a venue where they switched Philosophy I and II. This was brought to light one hour after the start :-)
8
One of the reasons I have moved away from the 5 out of 7 question format, is that in EVERY exam, I had two or three bleary-eyed chaps after the exam that answered all 7!
9
I suppose that most of you have forgotten, but in the 80's, the SRC battled to get that concession out of the 11th floor...Use It
10
On the other hand...

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